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Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Insights into and analysis of the trends, news, and happenings in the global enterprise software industry.
After more than 350 conservations with customers about the maintenance and support issue in the past 4 months, it’s becoming quite clear users expect from their software vendors. While those issues can be broken into tens of categories, three themes have emerged that include:
The bottom line- can vendors deliver on such promises?
Let’s see which vendors can deliver on all 3 pillars. Recent financial analyst reports from investment houses (i.e. Merrill Lynch’s Kash Rangan w.r.t. Oracle and Merrill Lynch’s Raimo Lenschow w.r.t SAP) indicate a sharpening downward trend in revenue estimates, not only for Q4 2008, but also for FY 2009 and FY 2010. Software vendors under pressure to make margins will be forced to choose whether they are willing to take short term pain in stock valuations for long term gain in improving the vendor-client commitment or make their numbers by disenfranchising customers during a time of crisis by violating any one of the three tenants of maintenance pricing. Because many software vendors have blown through their Q1 2009 pipe in Q4 2008, new deals are scarce and maintenance revenues are the easiest targets for “guaranteed” revenue and price increases.
Your POV.
Are you being hammered in your existing maintenance arrangements? Do you feel locked in or do you feel your vendor is willing to work with you on deals? Feel free to share with me your experience. You can post here or send me a private email to rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
(Photo: Main show floor for Dreamforce 2008 at Moscone Center, San Francisco, CA. Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.)
Over 9,000 attendees made it to the annual San Francisco pilgrimage to hear the high priest of SaaS kickoff the event. This year’s theme focused on the future of Cloud Computing, a focus on success, and how much Salesforce loves its customers. Key product, technology, and partnership announcements from the November 3 to 5 event include:
POV: Movement to expand the platform into new B2C facing markets give SFDC credibility in new social media markets as well as taking the Cloud wars to the consumer. Consider this a continuation in the battle for domiance of IDE’s in the cloud.
The bottom line - SaaS platforms continue to morph into cloud computing
Recent decisions by CODA, Glovia, and a host of software vendors show that the transition from on-premise middleware platforms to cloud-based platforms has begun. Application development and delivery professionals seeking new delivery models can benefit from these new platforms. Force.com is gaining momentum and given its history will emerge as one of the top 3 platforms for both customers and software vendors. The real question out there - what will vendor lock-in look like in the world of cloud computing? Will it be like the mainframe lock-ins 40 years prior?
Your POV.
Are you considering a SaaS deployment? Will you move to the cloud? Are you a software vendor looking at ditching your on-premise middleware platform? Feel free to share with me your thoughts. You can post here or send me a private email to rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Conversations and polling at recent user group meetings confirm a common sentiment that user groups should play a role as client advocates with the vendors. Information dissemination, benchmarking, product issues, training, and maintenance fee reductions rise to the top of the list in this 235 person on-going survey. While not explicit in all charters, here’s a full list of expectations user group members seek from their user group:
The bottom line - Get involved and make a difference.
Companies join user groups for both professional and social reasons. User groups command true power in influence a vendor’s direction while bringing common issues for discussion and sharing. Recent actions by SUGEN - the SAP User Group Executive Network in making some progress on the topic of maintenance fees and improving the vendor-client commitment show how publicity and impact can shape influence. The key is for user groups to leverage the power of the users and clients to publicly and privately create checks in the balance of power with the vendors. Go make a difference and contribute your time to your user group today!
Your POV.
Do you feel your user group has given you value? What are you looking from your user group? Feel free to share with me your experience. You can post here or send me a private email to rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
PEOPLE WHISPERS: MOVES, PROMOTIONS, AND MILESTONES
Congratulations to all! Thanks for your emails and alerts. If you’ve got a change or know of a promotion, keep dropping me a line!
Bruce Cameron is now President of CDC Software. The former executive vice president of worldwide sales and marketing was promoted from within. He now reports to Peter Yip, CEO of parent company CDC Corp.
Jocelyn Eisenberg has started her own analyst relations firm at Eisenberg Analyst Relations Services.
Garland Hall has been appointed SVP of Product Support at Deltek. Garland joins Deltek as of October 6th and brings experiences from EnterpriseDB, Composite Software, and webMethods. As a direct report to Kevin Parker, Garland will manage the global customer support operations.
Klaus Kreplin, the head of SAP’s NetWeaver Product and Technology Unit retired from SAP in October.
Allen Lovett joins Compiere as EVP of Field Operations. Allen will drive go-to-market stratgy for global expansion in sales and professional services. Lovett comes from senior experiences at Sawis Communications, Oracle, Siebel Systems, and Upshot.
John Papandrea joins SAP as a SVP of the Healthcare IBU from Deloitte.
Hannah Smalltree became Editorial Director, Enterprise Applications Media Group at TechTarget in July 2008.
Sergio Segal became a consultant in Competitive Intelligence at SuccessFactors in June 2008.
Borys Stokalski, VP at Infovide-Matrix has become President, Mazovian Chapter at PTI (Polish Information Processing Society) in October.
Michael Van der Breggen has been promoted from Operations Director to Vice President at Atos Origin. He will lead the company’s ERP services in North America as of October 29th.
Ben Wan became Board of Advisor at Motally in August 2008.
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CORPORATE WHISPERS
Got a scoop or something to share? Please post or send on to rwang0@gmail.com and we’ll keep your anonymity.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
As competition intensifies for new license deals and users are under pressure to be cautious with new spending, all parties should expect increasing pressure for quality customer references. Customers seeking references should focus on the following areas of relevance:
Its customary for the vendor to provide their reference lists. Keep in mind, many of these references are receiving monetary and non-monetary favors for their time. For vendor supplied references, customers should ask seven key questions to gauge the motive and incentives of these references:
The bottom line.
As an industry analyst, we often encounter vendor references that are genuine. However, from time to time, we have had to deal with vendor provided customer references who have vested and biased interests. In one MDM related example, 3 out of 5 of the vendor’s references did not conduct an open vendor selection process. 2 out of 5 vendors told us that the product was working well even though we had received inquiries to the contrary from other parts of their organization. It pays to do your due diligence. Make sure you understand what incentives and motivations are driving the reference to spend time talking with you.
Your POV.
Have you had a great vendor reference only to find out that the reference had stretched the truth? Feel free to share with me your experience. You can post here or send me a private email to rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
(Photo: The show floor from IBM IOD 2008 at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.)
IBM’s third annual Information On Demand event emerges as part of the “Must Attend” list of Enterprise Software pow wows. More than 7000 attendees were treated to 600 technical skill building sessions and 120 business leadership sessions. This year’s theme focused on the need to create an Information Agenda to sustain a competitive advantage and achieve business optimization. Some interesting perspectives from the event:
Customers See Value In an Information Agenda, now that they know what to call it…
As I was there to give talks on integrated data management strategies - Track 2787: The ROI of Instance Consolidation and Track 2792: The Business Value of Integrated Data Management, it was refreshing to find an information focused audience. Here are some interesting conversation snippets and observations:
Your POV
Have you created your own information agenda? Does this term resonate with you? Has your organization shifted from treating data as a commodity to valuing information as an asset? Post a comment or privately reach out to me at rwang0@gmail.com .
(Photo: View from Mix @ THE Hotel during the IBM Cognos reception - IOD 2008
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.)
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Continued interest in software as a service (SaaS) stems from the pay as you go pricing, constant stream of innovation, rapid deployment options, and the ability to do an end run around IT. As the number of options proliferate, enterprises will increasingly lean on SaaS as the mission critical system. Thus, end users need an enterprise apps strategy for SaaS that addresses the "I" word - Integration. The requirements and leadership for integration will lead to the pragmatic realization that SaaS can no longer be ignored by the IT department. As organizations brace for the proliferation of SaaS procurements integration should focus on:
A few key solutions providers to watch out for in the SaaS integration space include:
The bottom line.
The successful adoption of SaaS solutions will transform usage from purpose built point solutions to integration into mission critical processes. The result - SaaS integration will emerge as a key discipline in the overall enterprise app strategies of enterprises who seek to manage a portfolio of provisioned services.
Your POV.
Have you completed a successful SaaS to on-premise integration? How'd it go? Was it easier/harder than your on-premise integrations? Feel free to share with me your view points. You can post here or sending me a private email to rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Falling revenues, crumbling custom systems, and declining budgets often bring municipalities, state authorities, and related agencies together to gain efficiencies in vendor selection, purchasing power, implementation, maintenance, and support costs. End users in the private sector seeking long term efficiencies may want to take a page from the public sector and consider shared services consortium buying. Here are three reasons enterprises in similar industries or within large corporate entities may consider shared services consortia:
The bottom line.
Operational efficiency lessons learned from the public sector are applicable to private enterprises . Natural places for consortia development include primary nodes of networked enterprises. For example, a high tech manufacturer could standardize on 2 vendors and negotiate a license that would allow its suppliers and channels to incrementally add on. In some cases, industry trade groups such as as Blue Cross and Blue Shield in the health insurer space could provide such services. Depending on the legal structure of some user groups, such services could also be delivered. Consider software vendors such as CGI, Lawson, and Oracle for their expertise in arranging such agreements.
Your POV.
Got a consortia experience to share? Have any other tips for the economic down turn? Post a comment or drop me a line at rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
(Photo: Siperian Masters'08 registration area. Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.)
About 200 attendees were present as Ramon Chen, VP of Marketing, kicked off the event to the theme of adventurers and pioneers in MDM at the Bridgewater Marriott (New Jersey). CEO, Peter Caswell, led the keynote session with a view on where Siperian has been, where Siperian is going, and then introduced the Ravi Jagannathan VP of Product Management and Manish Sood, Senior Director of Product Management. They presented Siperian's road map well into 2012. Key announcements include:
In addition, a few key trends emerged from conversations with customers and partners:
The bottom line
Siperian customers seem to be well ahead of the pioneering stage with MDM. Customers we spoke to remain satisfied with their decisions and have been successful in proving existing value. Many customers have transcended past level 3 on the MDM maturity model.
Your POV
Do these trends jive with what you are seeing in MDM and CDI? Looking forward to hearing your thoughts. Post a comment or privately reach out to me at rwang0@gmail.com Check it out on the Forrester Blogs.
(Ramon Chen presenting the 2008 Siperian Masters Awards.Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.)
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
“Begin with the end in mind” is based on the principle that all things are created twice. There’s a mental or first creation, and a physical or second creation to all things.”
~ “The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People” by Stephen R. Covey
This Coveyism rings quite true especially with MDM deployments. Those seeking to innovate with MDM as opposed to just finish the job will find themselves asking key questions such as:
This “end in mind” reasoning then leads to the First and Second approach as Covey puts it:
The bottom line.
The planning phase is a critical component of MDM. Successful projects often start with a detailed design process that asks the key questions with both a proactive data management focus and role based actionable insight approach. Successful project teams tailor design to how people are using the information. Build this Coveyism as a principle in your design phase and avoid the hassles of a failed MDM project.
Your POV.
I’d love to hear your lessons learned. Feel free to share with me your MDM implementation story. You can post here or sending me a private email to rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Continued economic slow down, credit crisis, and diminished IPO market create the perfect storm for the Big 4 or as fellow blogger Josh Greenbaum likes to call it, MISO (ie. Microsoft, IBM, SAP, and Oracle). Here are four trends at work that shape the thinking on why 2009 will be another year of continued consolidation:
The bottom line.
Despite the gloomy economic outlook, end users should assume that the biggest vendors will continue their torrid pace of acquisitions. As these acquisitions factor into long term apps strategies and planning for 2009 purchases, users must assume that truly specialized solutions with significant industry footprint will be acquired. One proactive approach is to suggest acquisitions and tie-ups to key vendors during discussions with their senior management on financial viability as well as long term roadmap and strategy.
Your POV.
Who do you think will be acquired by whom next? Look forward to your thoughts. Post a comment or drop me a line at rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
(Photo: Jim Schaper Conducting the LV Philharmonic. Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.)
Inforum’s attendees were treated to a wonderful pre-keynote string quartet and a booming opening inspirational from both the Las Vegas Philharmonic Orchestra and the rock band Innovation. As the orchestra took a bow, Infor’s CEO Jim Schaper, emerged from the conductor’s stand to the surprise of over 5000 attendees. The ever personable and charismatic CEO discussed how Infor would help customers compete in an emerging world of business networks that required innovation to be able to respond to change. He also spoke of the $325M being invested back into the product in the next 4 years.
Key innovation announcements from the event include:
The bottom line
As one of the few enterprise apps vendors over $1B in revenues, Infor is set to be one of the survivors in the next economic cycle and a significant alternative for Oracle and SAP customers looking for purpose built solutions and divisional standalone applications. In addition, Inforum as an event is well on its way of must attend events during the year and highlights the key trends in the SMB market.
Your POV
Do you own an Infor product? Are you expanding the usage of Infor products? Do you see these as more value oriented alternatives to the Big 2? Do you have issues with Infor. Looking forward to hearing your thoughts. Post a comment or privately reach out to me at rwang0@gmail.com
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
In both the enterprise and SMB space, recent market conditions point to a lack of available financing for enterprise software purchases. This trend will continue as the credit markets tighten. The result - vendors will be more inclined to discount. Enterprises engaged in contact negotiation with software vendors should take this opportunity to seek additional discounts as the scarcity of new deals will put customers in the driver seat. Keep in mind a few tips:
The bottom line.
The next 6 to 12 months will provide a unique opportunity to negotiate for new deals. Expect continued discounts until the credit markets stabilize. Keep in mind that the above advice should be approved by and in partnership with your own legal counsel and vendor management professionals.
Your POV.
I'm curious as to how you did on your last deal. Share with me your story and concession by posting here or sending me a private email to rwang0@gmail.com. If I use it in my next research report, I’ll send you a copy of one of our Long Term Packaged Apps Strategy reports. Look forward to hearing your thoughts!
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Software vendors face significant decisions in the next 6 to 12 months on how to respond to the economic downturn. Anxious shareholders and slipping quarterly forecasts may lead vendors to ignore their implied vendor customer contracts. This "implied contract" is the inherent trust a customer has with their vendor to do the right thing. It's a trust that the customer placed with the vendor when they moved from custom apps to packaged software. This is important for two main reasons:
Software Vendors Can Take Proactive Measures To Improve Trust During Economic Uncertainty
So the real question - Will software vendors take a longer term view to find ways to both reduce expenses and improve how they treat their customers while delivering new innovation. At first, this may sound like a paradox, but unlike industries such as financial services and retail, high tech companies have not run out of cash. In fact, lessons learned from previous boom and bust cycles have taught them to hoard cash for rainy days or acquisitions. Most software vendors who survived the last economic rout socked away healthy levels of cash on hand. The real issue - convincing nervous shareholders that they need to reinvest a greater percentage of revenue back into areas such as service and R&D during the downturn so that they are able to capitalize during the next economic boom cycle.
5 Stakeholder Focused Strategies Can Be Funded Through Maintenance and Support Fees
Where would the money come from? Maintenance and support fees represent the most logical source. Recent conversations with insiders estimate the profitability of maintenance and support fees at up to 85% of the fees for products in the third year or greater in maturity. Further, most support organizations privately admit that not enough of the fees actually go back into the support organization, let alone new product development. Vendors could quickly earn customer trust by providing transparency as to where those monies are being allocated. Five steps that would improve ownership experiences and improve trust include:
The bottom line.
The most valuable commodity in this economy and in business relationships is trust. The current downturn in the economy has been exacerbated by a deterioration in trust and a lack of any one party to improve trust and accountability. Software vendors have this opportunity to take their position of strength and demonstrate how they can provide customers value during a down turn. In doing so, they will help their customers succeed and earn customer loyalty and good will when the economy picks up.
Your POV.
If your a vendor, what's missing? Will you be able to convince your board and management? For customers, what else are you looking for from your vendor. What will breed greater trust? Post a comment or drop me a line at rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Oracle’s announced the acquisition of Primavera, a leading project based solution (PBS) provider. This latest acquisition signals continued consolidation in the project based solution market which is a 6.6B market based on recent market forecasts. Oracle’s move addresses a significant need as project professionals remain challenged by existing business solutions that force-fit production and manufacturing applications to meet the needs of knowledge-based information workers. The new global business unit is in line with Oracle’s industry strategy and will be headed by Primavera’s current CEO, Joel Koppelman.
As enterprises continue the shift to a service-based and project-based world, project-based solutions (PBS) are the only applications category that enterprises can rely on to deliver process automation, process improvement, and innovation for this new world of work. PBS transcends traditional functional boundaries of project management, ERP, CRM, and supply chain management (SCM) to include requests from areas like project accounting, change management, time/expense, and analytics that surround the work being accomplished.
The bottom line.
The War for Mind Share In the Skies
The recent announcement of IBM’s Cloud Computing initiatives represents the latest front in the marketing and delivery battle for customers, partners, and ISV’s. IBM has pulled together a mix of existing technologies and new developments into a four pronged attack that focuses on:
Pricing Model Favorable to Broader ISV Adoption
With vendors looking to attract the greatest number of ISV’s into their cloud, OEM pricing often becomes an issue for PaaS adoption by ISV’s. Typical barriers to entry stem from a disconnect on how middleware is paid for and how SaaS models generate revenue, prohibitive upfront costs, and the lack of scaled pricing. IBM’s SaaS pricing pilot launched in July makes a pont to address key barriers wth low up front cost, fixed predictable annual costs, and a one year cancellation option.
The bottom line.
SaaS platform wars continue to intensify. Oracle’s announcement last week at Oracle Open World and this week’s announcement by IBM stresses the importance of this emerging battleground. As the enterprise vendors join Amazon, AppNexus, GoGrid, and Google, expect the convergence of Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0 to hasten.
Your POV.
So now your turn. Do you think the enterprise vendors will transition to the new world or will today’s cloud vendors become tomorrow’s enterprise veterans. Post a comment or drop me a line at rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
The tightening credit crisis continues to impact IT budgets and 2009 planning assumptions. Ongoing conversations with clients confirm that most enterprises anticipate some retrenchment of budgets. As business and IT teams seek to reduce the cost of existing systems, several key enterprise packaged app strategies rise in importance:
The bottom line.
As you begin the planning of your recession proof packaged apps strategy, leverage a long term apps strategy frameworks to assess people management and organizational alignment, business process definition and optimization planning, technology strategy planning, and solution centric ecosystem maturity. Keep in context the 4 major business drivers from efficiency, regulatory compliance, growth, and strategy.
Your POV.
Got a strategy, lessons learned, or success story to share? Post here or send a private email to rwang0@gmail.com. If I use it, I’ll send you a copy of one of our Long Term Packaged Apps Strategy reports. Look forward to hearing your thoughts!
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
All signs lead to an impending slow down in economic spending. Whether this will adversely impact IT budgets is not the issue, but how much will the carnage be is the concern being debated. Regardless, overall funding for new investments appears to be bleak which is why innovative business leaders seeking to fund innovation without significant capital outlays will most likely gravitate to alternative deployment options such as Software as a Service (SaaS) or other OnDemand models because of:
The hallmarks of SaaS are hard to ignore, especially during the advent of an economic slow down. Based on some of the growth rates in the previous quarter, vendors like Amitive, Concur, Intuit, NetSuite, Plexus, SalesForce.com, SuccessFactors, Taleo, and Zoho may have the leg up.
Your POV
Look forward to hearing your comments about how on-premise vendors will fare compared to the SaaS vendors. If you’ve got an idea or suggestion to share, please comment or send a private email to rwang0@gmail.com. Look forward to hearing your thoughts!
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
Quick thoughts from Scottsdale. Initiate as many you know is one of the leaders in the customer hubs/MDM market. At their annual conference, Initiate Exchange, a few key trends emerged from conversations with customers and partners:
The bottom line
Initiate customers remain quite satisfied with their choice and the level of investment in R&D by the management team. A growing list of partners continue to bolster Initiate’s mindshare in industries outside of their core pharma, healthcare, and public sector.
Your POV
Do these trends jive with what you are seeing in MDM and CDI? Looking forward to hearing your thoughts. Post a comment or privately reach out to me at rwang0@gmail.com Check it out on the Forrester Blogs.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
PEOPLE WHISPERS: MOVES, PROMOTIONS, AND MILESTONES
Congratulations to all! If you’ve got a change or know of a promotion, drop me a line!
David Corrigan is now a VP of Product Management at Camilion Solutions. David was the public face for MDM at IBM and the acquired entity DWL.
Ira Hall is now Acting Director of Global Revenue at Silicon Graphics. He joins from PWC where he served as a Director and Advisory Services Partner.
Charlene Li is now a Thought Leader and Founder at Altimeter Group as of July 2008. She joins from Forrester Research where she was a VP and Principal Analyst; and co-author of Groundswell.
Jeff McKee is now a Sr. Director, Microsoft OEM Division Product Management. He previously led various roles within the Microsoft Dynamics AX team including Director, Microsoft Dynamics ERP Industry Product Management.
Robert McNeill is the Founder at ThoughtBright. He joins from Service-now.com where he was the VP of Strategy and Marketing.
Mark Szeleyny is now Director of Product Marketing at ON24. He joins from Jigsaw where he served similar roles in growing that startup.
Eric Verniaut is now at Lawson as the company’s Executive VP of Lawson Professional Services. He joins from T-Systems North America where he serve as the CEO and Chairman - Americas Regions.
CORPORATE WHISPERS
Got a scoop or something to share? Please post or send on to rwang0@gmail.com and we’ll keep your anonymity.
(The personal contents in this blog do not reflect the opinions, ideas, thoughts, points of view, and any other potential attribution of my current, past, or future employers.)
Copyrighted 2008 by R Wang. All rights reserved
To avoid paying for shelfware you have to do a few things:
Your POV
I’m in the process of updating the Enterprise Software Licensee Bill of Rights. If you’ve got an idea or suggestion to share, please comment or send a private email to rwang0@gmail.com. If I use it, I’ll send you the updated version. Look forward to hearing your thoughts!
(The personal contents in this blog do not reflect the opinions, ideas, thoughts, points of view, and any other potential attribution of my current, past, or future employers.)
Copyrighted 2008 by R Wang. All rights reserved
Vendor led financing initiatives may prove to be the lubricant that keeps tech spending moving forward. Tech vendors such as Sun, Intel, HP, Microsoft, IBM, and Oracle are best positioned to whether the financial crisis because they have their own financing arms - an important resource which will provide them with such capabilities to extend not only to their customers, but also to their key partners.
Your POV.
Look forward to hearing your views. Where do you think the current crisis will take us?
Related posts: See Infor’s Move with IBM
(The personal contents in this blog do not reflect the opinions, ideas, thoughts, points of view, and any other potential attribution of my current, past, or future employers.)
Copyrighted 2008 by R Wang. All rights reserved